Tropical Storm Emily slammed the coast of Florida in late July. It’s storm season, and while ocean storms like Emily are difficult to anticipate and may certainly wreak havoc, for Florida and other coastal states such weather events are normal for the season.

Still, the elements take many forms, and even states that routinely experience extreme weather can be caught off guard. Be it roof-wrenching winds, scorching heat, torrential rainfalls, life-ending lightning strikes, or freezing cold, every state gets a taste of nature’s raw power.

Most agree that weather is dangerous. Just over 11,000 deaths and nearly 70,000 weather-related injuries were reported across the country between 2012 and 2016. The danger of extreme weather seems to know no boundary. Each year, victims may have been at home, outside, camping, golfing, playing sports, boating, swimming, or talking on the phone. Weather-related fatality-rates also vary considerably between states.

24/7 Wall St. aggregated injury and fatality data over a five-year period in every state using data compiled by the National Weather Service.

The most deaths in a single state from any one weather event last year occurred in Nevada, where 50 people died from heat in 2016 alone. Across all states, floods were the leading cause of weather-related deaths, documented as the cause in 126 cases over the course of 2016.

Weather fatality trends are erratic and tend to cluster in certain places across the country. So relatively few states actually report fatality rates that exceed the five-year average of 34.8 deaths per 1 million people nationwide.

While geography and climate are the leading causes of dangerous weather events, poverty amplifies their negative effects. According to a 2014 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which focused on heat and cold-related fatalities, weather-related death rates are “2 to 7 times as high in low-income counties as in high-income counties” This is likely because those living below the poverty line do not have the means to prepare for or adapt to extreme weather events and conditions, according to the CDC.

The median household income is above the national rate in 13 of the 25 states with the lower weather-related fatality rates. Of the remaining 25 states with higher weather-related death rates, seven have median household incomes that exceed the national average.

To determine the states with the most dangerous weather, 24/7 Wall St. compiled state by state fatality rates attributable to weather from the National Weather Service, a program of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). We totalled all weather-related deaths from 2012 through 2016 and adjusted for every 1 million state residents. The total value of damage caused by weather events also came from the NWS. Population and poverty figures came from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2015 American Community Survey.

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